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Phil Spector found guilty... Phil Spector Convicted of Second-Degree Murder
By JONATHAN LLOYD Updated 6:07 PM PDT, Mon, Apr 13, 2009 Related Topics: Phil Spector | Crime | Murder and Homicide | Criminal Trials | Trials 178 Comments Post a Comment Print Email Share ShareDel.icio.us Buzz up! MySpace Digg Fark AP Jurors found Phil Spector guilty of murder in the second-degree for the shooting death of 40-year-old actress Lana Clarkson. His first trial ended with a deadlocked jury, although the majority was convinced he was guilty. Music producer Phil Spector was found guilty Monday of second-degree murder in the February 2003 shooting death of actress Lana Clarkson. Phil Spector's Murder Trial View SlideshowPhil Spector's retrial ends with a second-degree murder conviction. Verdict Read in Phil Spector Retrial Watch VideoA guilty verdict is read Monday in the murder retrial of Phil Spector. Famous Mug Shots View SlideshowSee the photos of the famous and infamous after they end up on the wrong side of the law. Reaction: Phil Spector Convicted of 2nd-Degree Murder Watch VideoReaction from the courthouse after Phil Spector's conviction. Jurors also found Spector personally used the firearm while committing the crime at his Alhambra mansion. Sentencing has been set for May 29. Second-degree murder carries a penalty of 15 years to life in prison. The firearm enhancement adds three, four or 10 years in prison, according to the district attorney's office. The judge denied bail and Spector, wearing a fire-engine red tie and pocket square, was taken into custody after the verdict was announced. He also wore a "Barack Obama Rocks" button on his left suit lapel. Spector and his wife entered the courtroom at about 2 p.m., and the verdict was read at about 15 minutes later. His son and daughter were seated next to him at the counsel's table. Spector's wife, Rachelle, cried as the decision was announced. Spector showed no reaction as his attorney rubbed his client's left shoulder. Members of the Clarkson family, including her mother and sister, also were in the courtroom. "This is why we do this job," said prosecutor Alan Jackson. "If there's a wrong, we can attempt to try to right it. Today is when the Clarkson family gets their justice." As of Monday morning, the jury had spent about 30 hours discussing the case over eight days since March 26. Spector, 69, was charged with murder in the Feb. 3, 2003, shooting death of the 40-year-old actress and House of Blues VIP hostess at his mansion in Alhambra. He claims she shot herself with his gun. "We thought the case was about what the scientific and physical evidence showed," said Spector's attorney, Doron Weinberg. "We thought it showed he did not commit the crime. We thought that should have been sufficient." Weinberg said he believed the case was swayed by the judge's erroneous rulings, particularly one that allowed five women from Spector's past to testify. He said it would be the basis for appeal and a request for a new trial. Still, he added that Spector took the verdict "very stoically. He wanted to know what is next." Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Larry Paul Fidler told jurors that they could consider convicting Spector of involuntary manslaughter instead of second-degree murder. The option of involuntary manslaughter was not given in Spector's first trial. That jury deadlocked 10-2 on the second-degree murder charge in September 2007, with the majority voting in favor of convicting him. "This entire jury took this so seriously," the forewoman said in an interview room after the verdict was read. "I don't think there could have been another set of people who would listen to everything, review everything. It is a painful decision. Until somebody is in our shoes, you have no idea. It's tough to be on a jury. You're talking about another human being. We all have people we love. You try to evaluate another human being and it's difficult." She said there was not a single piece of evidence that convinced the jury of Spector's guilt. "Everybody was completely neutral," she said, until they went through the evidence "piece, by piece, by piece." Spector, renowned in music circles for the "Wall of Sound" technique he invented in the 1960s and used in his work with the Beatles and other groups, had been free on $1 million bail posted shortly after his arrest. Clarkson, who was best known for her starring role in the 1985 Roger Corman cult hit "Barbarian Queen," had bit parts on dozens of television shows and in a few well-known movies, such as 1982's "Fast Times at Ridgemont High." Case Timeline Spector had long lived in seclusion at his suburban Alhambra "castle." He was out on the town in Hollywood when he met Clarkson on Feb. 3, 2003, at the House of Blues. The tall, blond actress, recently turned 40 and unable to find acting work, had taken a job as a hostess. When the club closed in the wee hours, she accepted a chauffeured ride to Spector's home for a drink. Three hours later, she was dead. Spector's chauffeur, the key witness, said he heard a gunshot, then saw Spector emerge holding a gun and heard him say: "I think I killed somebody." Defense attorney Doron Weinberg disputed whether the chauffeur remembered the words accurately. In closing arguments, Weinberg listed 14 points of forensic evidence including blood spatter, gunshot residue and DNA, which he said were proof of a self-inflicted wound. "It's very difficult to put a gun in somebody's mouth," he said. "Every single fact says this is a self-inflicted gunshot wound," Weinberg argued. "How do you ignore it? How do you say this could have been a homicide?" But prosecutors portrayed Spector as a dangerous man who became a "demonic maniac" when he drank and had a history of threatening women with guns. They also contended blood spatter evidence proved that Clarkson could not have shot herself. As in the first trial, they presented testimony from five women who told of being threatened by a drunken Spector, even held hostage in his home, with a gun pointed at them and threats of death if they tried to leave. The parallels with the night Clarkson died were chilling even if the stories were very old -- 31 years in one instance. Clarkson's mother and sister sat through both trials and Spector's young wife sat across the courtroom from them. Copyright Associated Press / NBC Los Angeles http://www.nbclosangeles....-Case.html | |
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holy molly | |
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Who the hell married his ass and when??? | |
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SCNDLS said: Who the hell married his ass and when???
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Imago said: SCNDLS said: Who the hell married his ass and when???
I mean, he wasn't married when he shot ol' girl was he? So did his wife marry him AFTER he caught a case for shooting a bitch in his house??? Now, Ivy, THIS is an example of a dumb bitch. | |
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SCNDLS said: Imago said: I mean, he wasn't married when he shot ol' girl was he? So did his wife marry him AFTER he caught a case for shooting a bitch in his house??? Now, Ivy, THIS is an example of a dumb bitch. Not if a bitch knew said asshole would be in jail and she could be free to send his $$$$$.... actually, she may need to get with his lawyers instead, they may now have all his money. | |
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paintedlady said: SCNDLS said: I mean, he wasn't married when he shot ol' girl was he? So did his wife marry him AFTER he caught a case for shooting a bitch in his house??? Now, Ivy, THIS is an example of a dumb bitch. Not if a bitch knew said asshole would be in jail and she could be free to send his $$$$$.... actually, she may need to get with his lawyers instead, they may now have all his money. He might be crazy but he ain't THAT crazy. You know he got her and the money on lock. Shit, she's prolly too damn nervous to buy anything scared he gon' bust a cap in her ass for shopping an' shit. | |
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SCNDLS said: paintedlady said: Not if a bitch knew said asshole would be in jail and she could be free to send his $$$$$.... actually, she may need to get with his lawyers instead, they may now have all his money. He might be crazy but he ain't THAT crazy. You know he got her and the money on lock. Shit, she's prolly too damn nervous to buy anything scared he gon' bust a cap in her ass for shopping an' shit. | |
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Zero surprize ... | |
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there's a gazillion posts about this. take the time to check the other forums | |
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FINALLY! | |
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That crazy bastard held the Ramones captive in his house once! | |
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I hope they show him no mercy and give him the full 15 years so he can't do it to any other woman. The wife should thank her Maker for it might have just saved her life. Prince's Sarah | |
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